Brendan Burgess
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The Central Bank has admitted to me after a long exchange that their arrears figures are incorrect and have been for some time.
In their Quarterly Report for June 2018, they provided the following information for Unregulated Loan Owners (aka Vulture Funds)
For accounts over two years in arrears:
This is clearly wrong.
The average balance per account is €301,000 which looks about right.
But the average arrears per account is €167,000 which is clearly wrong.
If the average arrears is €167,000, it means that the average scheduled balance is €134,000.
The repayments on €134,000 over 15 years at 3% would be about €900
That means that €167,000 arrears represents an average of 15 years arrears.
As the average loan was probably issued around 2006 the average age of the loan is probably only about 12 years, so even if none of these borrowers paid anything at all, they wouldn't be 15 years in arrears.
You can see that the average arrears jumped by €38,000 over the March 2017 quarter.
As the average payments should be around €3,000 a quarter, the arrears could not have jumped by €38,000.
The Central Bank's initial response was that this was across a number of loan servicers, so it was a trend and therefore correct.
The only possible explanations I could come up with for the error were:
1) That when an interest-only loan was maturing, they considered the full loan to be in arrears.
So a €100,000 loan with repayments of €100 a month would go from being zero in arrears on a Monday to being €100,000 in arrears on a Tuesday. Or, as the way the Central Bank likes to measure these things, 1,000 months or 83 years in arrears.
2) When the Vulture Fund calls in the loan because it's in arrears, they consider the whole loan to be in arrears.
So a mortgage of €100,000 + €10,000 arrears would go from being €10,000 in arrears to €110,000 in arrears overnight.
The Central Bank stopped responding to my emails, so I sent it to Charlie Weston.
A week later, the Central Bank came back to me to admit that their figures are wrong.
The vulture funds are doing both of the things which I thought they might be doing.
The Central Bank agrees that a mortgage past its due date is fully in arrears.
They don't agree with that a loan which has been called in is totally in arrears.
Brendan
In their Quarterly Report for June 2018, they provided the following information for Unregulated Loan Owners (aka Vulture Funds)
For accounts over two years in arrears:
This is clearly wrong.
The average balance per account is €301,000 which looks about right.
But the average arrears per account is €167,000 which is clearly wrong.
If the average arrears is €167,000, it means that the average scheduled balance is €134,000.
The repayments on €134,000 over 15 years at 3% would be about €900
That means that €167,000 arrears represents an average of 15 years arrears.
As the average loan was probably issued around 2006 the average age of the loan is probably only about 12 years, so even if none of these borrowers paid anything at all, they wouldn't be 15 years in arrears.
You can see that the average arrears jumped by €38,000 over the March 2017 quarter.
As the average payments should be around €3,000 a quarter, the arrears could not have jumped by €38,000.
The Central Bank's initial response was that this was across a number of loan servicers, so it was a trend and therefore correct.
The only possible explanations I could come up with for the error were:
1) That when an interest-only loan was maturing, they considered the full loan to be in arrears.
So a €100,000 loan with repayments of €100 a month would go from being zero in arrears on a Monday to being €100,000 in arrears on a Tuesday. Or, as the way the Central Bank likes to measure these things, 1,000 months or 83 years in arrears.
2) When the Vulture Fund calls in the loan because it's in arrears, they consider the whole loan to be in arrears.
So a mortgage of €100,000 + €10,000 arrears would go from being €10,000 in arrears to €110,000 in arrears overnight.
The Central Bank stopped responding to my emails, so I sent it to Charlie Weston.
A week later, the Central Bank came back to me to admit that their figures are wrong.
The vulture funds are doing both of the things which I thought they might be doing.
The Central Bank agrees that a mortgage past its due date is fully in arrears.
They don't agree with that a loan which has been called in is totally in arrears.
Brendan
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